I doubt, or at least hope that I should doubt, that anyone is unaware that the United States has a history of excluding women and people of color from important institutions that offer opportunities toward a better quality of life. To be more specific, we used to have explicit laws and policies that barred women and racial and ethnic minorities from the labor market, institutions of higher education, and the military, just to name a few. We can celebrate the social progress that has been made with respect to race, ethnicity, and gender (especially now during Black History Month and next month, Women's History Month) and really jump for joy when we start to see true equality. One victory has been an equal representation of women in institutions of higher education. But, now that women are starting to enroll and graduate in higher numbers than men, some people are starting to worry, like New York Times's Alex Williams:
"North Carolina, with a student body that is nearly 60 percent female, is just one of many large universities that at times feel eerily like women’s colleges. Women have represented...

America needs to talk about sex. All of us, not some of us because we are each responsible for ourselves and others.